On
February 22, 1943 Sophie Scholl, her brother Hans, and Christoph Probst
were found guilty of treason against Germany. The three were beheaded
the same day. They were condemned as traitors for producing and
distributing leaflets titled - Leaflets of The White Rose
- the name of their loosely knit group. Those leaflets clearly and
passionately explained the crimes being committed against millions of
innocent people in Europe and Russia by politicians acting in the name
of the German people. The leaflet was the sixth in a series that had
been distributed over a period of a little less than a year by various
means throughout Germany.

The
White Rose movement was intended to trigger an awakening by the German
people to their ability to positively influence society to become more
humane. Their rallying cry was “Freedom and Honor!” The White Rose
advocated that German’s proactively work towards creating such a
society by rising up and refusing to passively go along with the
government that was staining the good name of the German people. For
daring to suggest that German’s act on their conscience instead of
mindlessly following the government’s directives, the people of The
White Rose were targeted by the German government to be ruthlessly
hunted down, In addition to the Scholls and Christoph Probst, Alexander
Schmorell, Willi Graf, Professor Kurt Huber and Hans Leipelt were
executed.

Whether
explicitly or intuitively, The White Rose participants recognized that
the means used to achieve their desire to live in a society in which
women, men and children were respectfully treated and did not exist to
be the tools of the government needed to be consistent with that end.
The men and women of The White Rose did not engage in violence. Rather,
they pursued their dream and conveyed their message by distributing
leaflets that expressed truths otherwise unavailable to be read by the
German people. In the midst of war torn Germany they dared to go beyond
exercising freedom of thought by exercising freedom of association,
speech and the press: for which some of them paid with their lives.
Click on The White Rose to go to a webpage about these courageous people.

The power of The White Rose was proven only days after the execution of Hans and SophieScholl
and Christoph Probst, and it showed that the political authorities in
Germany indeed had much to fear from an elevation in the consciousness
of the German people. Beginning on February 27, 1943, German non-Jewish
women began a non-violent protest at the Jewish Community Center on
Rosenstrasse in Berlin, where nearly 2,000 Jewish men were imprisoned.
Slated for deportation, those men were the husbands, boyfriends, sons
and friends of the women. For a week the women, who are estimated to
have numbered as many as 6,000, sang songs, held hands and openly
defied the Gestapo’s orders to disperse and ignored threats of being
machine gunned or arrested. Fearing that non-violent challenges to
their authority would spread throughout Germany, the government
relented after a week and released all the men. Most of those men
survived the war. They were only saved by the courage of the women who
rose to an extraordinary level at a time when it was a matter of life
and death for those they loved. Click on The Rosenstrasse Protest to go to a webpage about these courageous women.

It is in the spirit of the heroes of The White Rose and The Rosenstrasse Protest that the word forejustice
was created to express action that moves towards an increase in the
justice prevalent in a society. Proactively expressing one’s insistence
on justice creates a positive bubble that displaces a like amount of
tolerance for misjustices that would otherwise occupy that space in
time, consciousness and reality. Envisioning that an increase in the
justice in society is possible is the first step to proactively
expressing that belief through the means of positive action consistent
with achieving that end.